Liu Xinyun, deputy governor of northern China’s Shanxi province and director of the provincial public security department, is under investigation for “suspected serious violations of Party disciplinary rules and laws”—an oft-used euphemism for corruption in China, according to an April 9 notice by the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) top watch-dog agency.
Public data shows that the 59-year-old sacked CCP official had a long history of high-ranking positions in the CCP’s political, police, and judicial systems.
However, mounting evidence suggests Liu was a serious human rights offender by toeing the CCP’s line of persecuting Falun Gong practitioners, an ongoing nationwide campaign that began in July 1999.
From December 2003 to December 2011, Liu worked as director and party chief of the local public security bureau in Heze City.
During his tenure, 36 Falun Gong practitioners were illegally sentenced to imprisonment and 26 were placed in forced labor camps.
Later, Liu was sent to Jinan, the capital of the province, to be director and party chief of the local public security bureau until December 2014.
During this period, at least eight Falun Gong followers were kidnapped, including Du Zezhou, Sun Yuzhi, Sun Moqing, and Wang Hongfeng, whose prison sentences ranged from one to seven years.
From December 2014 to January 2018, Liu was promoted to the position of director of the Cybersecurity Administration of the CCP’s Ministry of Public Security and director of Information Security & Center in Beijing until January 2018.
The peak of his political career was the period while he was deputy governor of northern China’s Shanxi province and director and party chief of the provincial public security department.
During this period, at least 101 Falun Gong practitioners were kidnapped and had their homes ransacked across the province.
Currently, more than 50 Falun Gong followers are being held illegally and are facing criminal charges, according to incomplete statistics from Minghui.